Frontiers in Medicine (Dec 2022)

Case report: Recurrent angioedema: Diagnosing the rare and the frequent

  • Thomas Buttgereit,
  • Thomas Buttgereit,
  • Lauré M. Fijen,
  • Lauré M. Fijen,
  • Carolina Vera,
  • Carolina Vera,
  • Karl-Christian Bergmann,
  • Karl-Christian Bergmann,
  • Marcus Maurer,
  • Marcus Maurer,
  • Markus Magerl,
  • Markus Magerl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.1048480
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Hereditary angiodema with normal C1 inhibitor and unknown mutation (HAE-nC1INH-UNK), an exceedingly rare subtype of HAE, appears to be often diagnosed in patients who do not have this condition, but have mast cell-mediated angioedema. Here, we report two patients diagnosed with HAE-nC1INH-UNK by their physicians, who referred them to our center for treatment continuation with costly kallikrein-kinin-system targeted therapies. We describe how we established the correct diagnosis of recurrent mast cell-mediated angioedema after thorough investigation of both patients and initiated effective treatment with omalizumab. Also, we present and discuss the consensus criteria for diagnosing the very rare condition HAE-nC1INH in light of recent research and based on our own clinical experience. In conclusion, HAE-nC1INH-UNK should only be considered after more common differential diagnoses, i.e., mast cell-mediated angioedema, have thoroughly been investigated and ruled out. This approach reduces both the patients’ disease burden and healthcare costs and contributes to meaningful research.

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